Saturday, May 31, 2008

My own room



made a studio today. for painting and writing and drawing and smoking while doing all those things. i have the intranet down here in the garage. guy was impressed. he said, "i don't know, i didn't expect it...to be this cool. i mean...it's a whole room!"

besides voracious cleaning, there was stockpiling of boxes like for the flatscreen tv and the kitchen chairs. i made a fake wall with upholstery remnants hanging ceiling to floor. i pulled out some of my favorite art. old stuff. got to see my paintings again, some of which i really like. not so much a surprise that the subject matter is largely rock star portraiture.



see the reproduction, above, of patrick nagel's "Rio," the record cover for duran duran. the date on it reads 6.85. one of my first graphic pieces. ha.

sitting in this room is a wonderful reclamation of my wild, single days when i spent all my time in my loft smoking pot, listening to music and making stuff. yay.

Frank Black Francis


except for:
1. brackish boy
2. whatever happened to pong?
3. big red


best songs off Bluefinger
1. captain pasty
2. tight black rubber
3. threshold apprehension

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Monday, May 19, 2008

Nude


wow! on so many levels!!

(thanks to T)

Wee Wee Wee Little Poem


my friend E's got me thinking about poetry. i told him about my number one favorite poem, The World is a Beautiful Place by Lawrence Ferlinghetti, which my friend M showed me in 10th grade. but the second favorite surprises people. i have no idea where i first read it, but i know it's not something you come by often. i memorized it 22 years ago (writing teacher's class?) because of it's petite size. i have not ever looked it up or anything so if you know it and it's wrong somewhere, i apologize. ok.

Wee Wee Wee Little Poem
by jack kerouac

wee wee wee little poem
wee wee wee not-worth-reading little poem

you start off suckin' in milk
and you end up suckin' smoke

and you know what milk and smoke denote.

(third favorite poem, and fourth and fifth.)

Saturday, May 17, 2008

animals killed in the road

[there used to be a picture here based on the subject matter. sorry if anyone feels like i assualted them with it.]

intolerable: dead animals in the road. there are so many in marin county. if i see anything resembling a dead animal on the road, i look only enough to not hit it again. on my way to napa last weekend, i saw five. including what looked like a deer. i vaguely saw what looked like a grisly decapitation of a large rodent-type animal. that scene from watership down plays in my head. where animals in the forest are suddenly unable to travel, because each way they turn there's a road with roaring nightmarish automobiles intermittently and indeterminably burning paths through their backyards.

that day to napa, i was reminded of a bad scene in my life. my sisters, mom and i were in our turquoise dodge dart headed to sunday school and church one morning in 1986. we saw a black shape in the middle of the road ahead. i thought it was the neighbors' terrier. it wasn't. it was my cat, spaz, mother of Ed, my best friend at the time. we drove a small circle around the shape and saw it was her. i started screaming out, AHHHH! AHHHHHHHHH! AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH! i hyperventilated. my mom yelled, "STOP IT RIGHT NOW! CALM DOWN! CALM DOWN!" my sisters sat bug-eyed and silent. stop, PLEASE STOP! i begged her. she wouldn't. instead, she drove us to church and called my dad to remove spaz from the road. i was left to sit in a sunday school class of one. on this particular sunday i just let the southern baptist bullshit wash over me. towards my face, over my head, and gone. there was no fight in me that day.

it is very very difficult to not loathe people. hate them. feel ashamed to be one of them. nasty, vile creatures we are.

Laughter Nuggets


merlin mann's twitter posts are little laughter nuggets knocked out in 140 characters or less. this one especially:

I used to think peeling out sounded kinda cool. Now, I think it sounds like "I need to find a medication that'll make me feel less sad."


this one too:

Mr. Young, where are the salutes To Those Who've Just Recently Finished Rocking? Where's THEIR parade, sir? Shame on you, sir. Shame.


and:
Sometimes when I talk to a Windows person about using a Mac, I feel like I'm explaining Van Halen to a horse.

his newest creation, an audio-based journal of "Emotional Hygiene."

these shoes are made for...


my two favorite pairs of shoes of all time are made by Prada – one pair of calf-high boots and one pair of the most perfect mary janes ever made. they fit my feet like they're custom-made. narrow and long with a perfectly-shaped insole. i adore them.

i don't adore these. i think they scare me. i think they might do something to me if i look at them too long. like the little black dots i've got on my eyeball from looking at that eclipse in san diego.

Meeting James...Again


this new life of spider combat in my convertible, healthy eating and book readings is really appealing to me.

went to see james frey read today. actually, i didn't see him read because i was reading along with him, at his suggestion, in my newly purchased Bright Shiny Morning. it's really fat. i think it might be "sprawling." it's about LA, it's sprawling, i'm thinking about raymond carver and Short Cuts. LOVE.

the marin audience. wow. how annoying. HATE. i was kind of embarrassed to be with them. every person there had a precision haircut and rich-person skin. except for the little wall-eyed lady standing behind me in the signing line. i won't choose a marin reading over a city one next time. i prefer standing in freezing wind in a mini-skirt for 45 minutes over straining to hear a reading while babies squall and people shift in their squeaky seats while asking questions like "what's your relationship with the tao te ching?" one small, older lady raised her hand. he called on her. she said, "i want you to know your book made me sober when i read it a year ago." he smiled his sideways smile and looked uncomfortable, didn't say anything, and the audience erupted in applause. i felt like i was in an AA meeting. who wants to be at an AA meeting? nobody.

unlike meeting augusten, i was only a little bit nervous meeting james. i've met him before, so it was easier. my voice came out weird anyway, and i sounded retarded...he asked me, do you want me to say anything? as he prepared to sign. i suddenly felt like how could i ask for more, but it came out, "no. you've said so much already." there was silence then. i felt my moment slipping away like it did with augusten. i became aware that i could lose it forver, so i started. "i have to tell you...My Friend Leonard, affected me emotionally more than any other book ever has. he looked up. "bawling," i told him. "bawling. it was amazing," he listened blank-faced, maybe suspicious, i went on, "when i get a reaction like that to something i've written it's very satisfying." he looked down, you're a writer. "yes." what do you write? "non-fiction. observations." are you published? "not yet," i said. will you? "someday, yes, most likely." well, i'll give you my email, if you need help when the time comes, write me. "oh, ok."" the offer really surprised me, he sounded genuine.

he's my peer. we're the same age....why do i think about that a lot, i don't know.

i didn't look at my inscription until i got to the car. it reads, Lou. You've got a beautiful smile have a beautiful life. james frey. it sounded familiar to me. i recalled the first meeting and not knowing what to tell him to write then too. when i got home i pulled My Friend Leonard off the shelf. yep. you're a beautiful girl have a beautiful life. james frey.

huh. i go to these readings to see if the people are real. to know. but i can't read james. and not because he lied about his book. because his face never changes. what is that guy really thinking?! i can't tell if he's real or not.

i really want him to be.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Righting wrongs



wept tears of joy like i witnessed justice...or something. i don't know. very emotional reaction. very very...relieved. a pressure has been taken off. something wrong was happening, and now that's changed. or starting to change.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Injury Log #4


1. fingernail dug into left thumb knuckle during nefarious activity.
2. slam into bagger's shelf at grocery store. bruise thigh. get mad.
3. toe rash gets out of control. can no longer ignore. use medicine 9 years past exp. date. must apply many times a day to get effect. rash gets better.
4. new headache trend that makes me feel like a fall leaf. thin, weak, about to break.

Chinny chin chin

"I'm glad she grew a chin. Chinless people freak me out."
- SB, new father

Lucky Dog


a happy blur song, a maxfield parrish sky, a convertible, soft marin air, 70mph on the slalom, feeling like christie brinkley in that red corvette...

makes me glad i didn't give up the fight.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Liver! I hardly know her!


when i drink on straterra, i turn purple in the face. learned today that's about the liver not being able to process the alcohol, and that in rare cases, strattera robs the liver of enzymes it needs to be fully functional. the fact that this happens when i've only had a few sips of alcohol could mean i have to give up strattera (or alcohol). motherfucker. how am i supposed to make a choice between what makes me a better worker, and what makes me a better person? i'm only kind of kidding.

Monday, May 12, 2008

WishList.com

yet another way to observe someone, to see how they live.

The Amazon Wish List.

Meeting Augusten



i got there 40 minutes early. i wanted it to be an hour but shit got busy at work right at leaving time. i called ahead that morning to find out everything i could about the processes. i was told there were tickets. i was told you must buy one of his books there that night to get a ticket. i was told people with tickets were assured a spot, and that people without were not. i already had his new book, but i knew i couldn't take a chance, i'd have to buy another one with my last remaining $25. i called my friend D. i told him he needed to see this guy, i told him i'd buy the book for him for his birthday. he said Fuck Yeah! (too bad for him he didn't show).

of course i knew when i stepped out of my car and my skirt folded over onto itself several times, that i'd made a big fashion mistake. san francisco and swishy skirts do not mix. i forgot this detail. i also had no jacket. when i left work in marin it had been too hot for anything but a tshirt. naturally, it was freezing in the City and in order to control my skirt i had to forfeit warmth and wrap my way-thin sweater around my waist. i stood there. in the cold. and waited. i told myself as i began to lose patience after 30 minutes, "you will get in. and you will hear him. it will happen." and i focused on that.

to meet augusten burroughs and see him in person, hear him in person, feel him in person, and know he is real. i needed to know. focused.

several hundred people showed up for his reading at Books, Inc. in the castro. the line went seven stores down the block. when i got inside, i saw that i would not get a seat, but it didn't really matter because i had a view. many did not. what followed was unexpected. i felt like i was in kindergarten. as we all waited, fatigued from battling city elements, a song was played for us. when augusten came out, finally, he explained the song was by tegan and sara and had been written and recorded for his audio book. huh. sometimes listening to songs in public with no band to look at is very uncomfortable. like watching tv commercials in a movie theatre. i would not choose it.

then he began reading. his hands shook while he held the book. i couldn't tell if it was because he was nervous or just positioned funny in his hand. he had a trucker hat on, high on his head. a flashy earring in his left ear caught spotlights, he wore a circular pendant of silver on a black string around his neck. his white tshirt allowed nicely for it with a low dip in the front. a graphic of the sculpture david (?) sat on the lower left hip of the tee. a leather jacket and nicely worn jeans (diesel?) hung perfectly off his narrow hips. i could see a metal-studded belt underneath it. i love those belts. he had a strong jaw, but a slight redness under the stubble on his cheek that showed me he'd been rid. i couldn't stop looking at the contrast. healthy. rid. healthy. rid. he seemed to turn more and more rid as he read and red as he rid.

he read well. i so appreciate a good reader. it's not an easy task. especially in front of people. there is a rhythm of breathing that i always find difficult, even though i am a good reader. it's creative in that there has to be a letting go in order to act instinctively, which is omnipresent. must tap into instinct. you have to listen to the sound and trust yourself. there is a rhythm to the sound of the words and the layout of the sentences that can be hit perfectly, or awkwardly. he hit them perfectly. like jerry garcia playing stella blue in 1990.

lastly, some Q&A. questions ranged from the stupid, "what was it like living with the finches?" well, that's a long story, maybe i'll write it down sometime. to the really interesting, "you've talked a lot about recovery from loss, and the holes in your heart, but you haven't talked about how you learned to trust people." writing and being published has helped me learn to trust people...it has taught me about people because for every reading i go to, there are people who come up to me and say, "this happened to me too." you know, you, there in the orange shirt with white stripes (points to guy) can say out loud the very worst thing that you've ever done, and i guarantee there is someone else in this room that has done the same thing, or knows exactly how it feels to do that thing.

one woman asked him how it could be possible, as he states, that in his father's 2nd marriage that lasted 25 years, that wife never knew the monster that augusten writes about in his new book. he answered her question by re-stating that his father was a sociopath. the woman then went on to say, "well, i've been married 20 years and i just can't imagine how that's possible." she was challenging him. it pissed me off. you just need to know one sociopath to understand how very possible that is. and i have known. and i can believe it.

i wanted to tell him that when i met him. when it was my turn for him to sign my book. i wanted to tell him that he is the reason i am no longer a poverty-stricken graphic designer; the reason i became a copywriter. i wanted to ask him if he thought they might see some strings in switzerland this summer (he told us he loves particle physics). i wanted to say, what your brother said about memory and emotions is really cool. i wanted to thank him for helping me learn how to be an honest writer. more than anything, i wanted to tell him that.

but all that came out, when i stepped up to him, was a tiny little voice, "hi." i didn't even recognize my voice, it was so small and timid and shy. he said, hi. and then he read the little sticky note i was told to put on the page that i wanted him to sign. it said "louisiana." are you louisiana? little tiny voice, "yes." and he looked at me. really looked at my face. i felt like he knew i was about to say something, but could not. he looked down and started writing and said, thank you for coming tonight. and out came my tiny voice, "thank you for reading...and writing." doy. he looked back up at me, into my face and waited a beat. nothing came out. he smiled. he felt kind. he told me have a good night. i told him, "take care." his last words, ok. soft smile. while still looking at me, there was an undefined spacetime moment, and then i walked away. i felt like i just witnessed a me that exists in a parallel opposite-world. a shy me that's scared of people and can barely speak. i kept trying to put a face to the voice...

i walked away glad that i was finally moving through space rather than just standing in it. i looked at my cell phone clock. it had been 2.5 hours since my arrival. walking felt good.

i got in my car and lit a cigarette.

i love him.

Monday, May 05, 2008

Augusten Burroughs' Memory


augusten's new book about his relationship with a bad dad, A Wolf At The Table, is really stirring up a lot of dad memories for me. which is funny because that is the topic of AB's interview with new york magazine: how much can you remember? and why?

augusten's "assburger" (asperger's) brother, also an author, said this about AB having a tremendous memory and perfect recall:

“I really feel strongly that people are critical of my brother because he’s so emotional. But that absolutely does not mean it’s made up. Just because somebody dramatizes the emotional content of something in their mind does not make it false.”

augusten is having to answer a lot of questions about his memoir writing and style and ability to remember details starting at one and a half years old. the idea of emotions making a deeper memory footprint really resonates for me. i have always remembered details about what i was wearing at certain events and where i was when i heard a certain thing, and what i was looking at while listening, with a special talent for remembering conversations verbatim...and what a coincidence: i've also been called "SO" emotional more than anything else in my life. this kind of emotional fallout really brings to light a lot of ideas i've yet to investigate (can you make yourself remember something more clearly if you scare yourself at the same time?)

how about this totally unexciting conversation i had weekend before last. why would i remember an unexciting conversation? doesn't seem like an emotional situation, but ah, it was. i felt very strongly throughout the conversation. first i was really angry and annoyed, then sad and self-hating. i'm not sure why else i would remember something so banal.

with lady at gas station in a poor central valley town:
(i'm buying a bottle of smart water)

lady: so, ya gotta get the "smart water" huh?
me: uh, yeah. (i look up, hating her, knowing she's about to spout what she thinks is an original thought)
lady: aren't the waters all the same?
(she smirks and looks at me, like "AH-HA! i cornered you ridiculous brand-loyal water drinker!")
me: no. this one has a sharper taste than most because of the electrolytes.
(lady waits for a smile. i don't give it to her. i'm annoyed. her face falls.)
lady: oh.
(then i feel bad, she knows not what it means.)
me: but most of them are the same.
lady: oh.

i already know how augusten's new book is going to be critiqued and why an attack on his memory happened in the new york mag interview in the first place. the first few pages read like a movie. he describes scenes i've seen. they're so familiar, but, at the same time, he so perfectly matches words to feelings...feelings that words didn't seem to have been invented for yet. but he finds them, and makes the feeling/memory clear, and that quality is nothing short of amazing. he's also funny.

"Trying to remember was like plowing snow, packing it into a bank. Dense whiteness...I could remember the smell of the sun on my arm...I saw a monkey on a leash and thought it was an ugly foreign child."

criminal

trying to figure out exactly how hysterical i should be feeling about xx xxx deciding to be a tax criminal. and taking xx xxx down that road with him.

she told me to put it in a box in my brain and shove it really far away.